The Yale Center on Climate Change and Health’s online certificate program has been newly redesigned with an updated look at international health and social equity.
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The link between science and art may not be obvious to some. But for three Northwestern University scientists, the connection between the two is innate.
Beginning this weekend, professors Aaron Packman and Daniel E. Horton and molecular biosciences Ph.D. candidate Luis Schachner will explore this connection at different exhibits around Chicago.
Packman and Horton were among 14 artists and scientists brought together as a part of an art exhibition opening at the Brushwood Center at Ryerson Woods, “Third Coast Disrupted: Artists + Scientists on Climate.” The exhibition culminates a yearlong conversation between scientists and artists that centered on impacts and solutions to climate change in the Chicago region.
why we believe and i believe this is realistic, which is beyond that it is technically realistic. the fact is governments will pursue this path based on idealism and self-interest of their people but in the end they will make their decisions on these issues based on analyses of their national security interests and their domestic politics and our discussions over the last day and half have been very much grounded in looking at the perspectives of various nations from the point of view of interest and the fact that such a group, not just representing different nations in their private capacities but also different political viewpoints, came around a plan such as this, suggests to me that from a national security and political point of view and technical point of view, there is a realistic way to get from here to a world of no nuclear weapons. tom pickering. the question of practicality, less up in the atmosphere than the issue of realism. if you look at the last chart call